· A major open access collection edited by Thomas Metzinger (University of Mainz) and Jennifer Windt (University of Mainz / Monash University) is now available at http://www.open-mind.net.

· A total of 117 contributions were written by 90 junior and senior members of the MIND Group, including internationally renowned researchers working in different areas of philosophy, psychology, cognitive neuroscience and neuroethics. ﻿

Born in France in 1982, Nicolas has grown up in a musical family, and has been initially trained on the violin, classical percussion and music theory. He later studied vibraphone and has been performing regularly with jazz and rock ensembles on the drums and the vibraphone since 1999. In parallel, Nicolas studied electronical engineering, and graduated with a PhD from Universite de Bourgogne. Since 2010, he is a postdoctoral researcher in the cognitive neurosciences of music, with a focus on rhythm perception and production, as well as musical imagery. His projects include clinical work on the effect of rhythm in the rehabilitation of Parkinson’s Disease, as well as basic research in brain oscillations, musical performance in drumming, and spontaneous musical imagery (the “tune in the head” phenomenon, also called “earworms”). His research is performed between Goldsmiths, University of London, in the Music Mind and Brain group, and the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig, Germany.

Education

ENSEA

Diplome d ingenieur, 2002 - 2005

Basic Information

Gender

Male

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